PhDApplications Closed
Prof. Jean-Pascal Pfister
University of Bern, 5 Bühlplatz, CH-3012 Bern, CH
Apply by Jan 31, 2024
Application deadline
Jan 31, 2024
Job
Job location
Prof. Jean-Pascal Pfister
University of Bern, 5 Bühlplatz, CH-3012 Bern, CH
Geocoding in progress.
Source: legacy
Quick Information
Application Deadline
Jan 31, 2024
Start Date
Flexible
Education Required
See description
Experience Level
Not specified
Job
Job location
Prof. Jean-Pascal Pfister
Job Description
The project aims at answering an almost 100 year old question in Neuroscience: “What are spikes good for?”. Indeed, since the discovery of action potentials by Lord Adrian in 1926, it has remained largely unknown what the benefits of spiking neurons are, when compared to analog neurons. Traditionally, it has been argued that spikes are good for long-distance communication or for temporally precise computation. However, there is no systematic study that quantitatively compares the communication as well as the computational benefits of spiking neuron w.r.t analog neurons. The aim of the project is to systematically quantify the benefits of spiking at various levels. The PhD students and post-doc will be supervised by Prof. Jean-Pascal Pfister (Theoretical Neuroscience Group, Department of Physiology, University of Bern).
Requirements
- The PhD candidates (resp. post-doc candidate) should hold a Master (resp. PhD) degree in Physics
- Mathematics
- Computer Science
- Computational Neuroscience
- Neuroscience or a related field. She/he should have keen interests in developing theories that can be tested experimentally. Preference will be given to candidates with strong mathematical and programming skills. Expertise in stochastic dynamical systems
- point processes
- control theory and nonlinear Bayesian filtering will be a plus.
Related Domains
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Job location
Prof. Jean-Pascal Pfister
Coordinates pending.